Move zulip.subject_dict into composebox_typeahead.seen_topics,
and encapsulate the use of seen_topics inside composebox_typeahead
with add_topic() and topics_seen_for().
(imported from commit 2bc2d1714fabdc07a661cbf815d14b36a08990e2)
We now show a list of users and allow you to deactivate a user using the
same process as `python manage.py deactivate_user`.
We add a new menu item accessible from the gear icon which will eventually
have much more than just this, but we have a good start here.
Here we also add a property to UserProfile which determines whether you're
eligible to access the administration panel, and then have code which shows
the menu option if so.
This introduces a new JS file, admin.js.
(imported from commit 52296fdedb46b4f32d541df43022ffccfb277297)
We instead implemented the ~desired functionality here using the
API and a bot to make a totally read-only, static, slowly-updating
view into the Zuliverse.
This is the moral equivalent of reverting deb035b4c702fcdb0e660ed549fe74c682abb6d9
(imported from commit 9d743fe82f197b37f005e5a038f77cc4b8566024)
1) The class Filter now lives in its own module.
2) The function canonicalized_operators() is now a class method on Filter.
3) The function message_in_home moved to filter.js and became private.
4) Various calling code had to change, of course.
5) Splitting out Filter helped simplify a few tests.
(imported from commit e41d792b46d3d6a30d3bd03db0419f129d0a2a7b)
The compose_fade has three public exports:
set_focused_recipient
unfade_messages
update_faded_messages
All code was pulled directly from compose.js, except for the
one-line setter of set_focused_recipient. The focused_recipients
variable that used to be in compose.js was moved to compose_fade.js,
hence the need for the setter.
(imported from commit 462ca5d0d0bd58612d0197f3734a8c78de8c6d30)
"Kiosk mode" is a "read-only" Zulip suitable for embedding into
an iframe on another site. I say "read-only" in quotation marks,
because the account is still a fully-fledged active account on
the server, and we just tear out a bunch of stuff in Javascript
(that a malicious user could easily re-enable).
So in that sense, it's not actually safe in security-sensitive
environments -- malicious users logged in via kiosk mode
can do anything the kiosk-mode user can do.
(We need this functionality for the customer3 realm specifically;
we'll possibly just tear this code back out once that experiment
has run its course.)
(imported from commit deb035b4c702fcdb0e660ed549fe74c682abb6d9)
This is a pure refactoring that mostly just moves code from
subs.js to the new stream_color.js and updates module references
accordingly. In order to prevent introducing some exports,
update_stream_color was given an additional "sub" parameter
and update_stream_sidebar_swatch_color was given an "id"
parameter.
Killed off unused initial_color_fetch var.
(imported from commit b7644ce67f50d31fb46f564d758d661eea776aa6)
This needs to be deployed to both staging and prod at the same
off-peak time (and the schema migration run).
At the time it is deployed, we need to make a few changes directly in
the database:
(1) UPDATE django_content_type set app_label='zerver' where app_label='zephyr';
(2) UPDATE south_migrationhistory set app_name='zerver' where app_name='zephyr';
(imported from commit eb3fd719571740189514ef0b884738cb30df1320)
For now, we just get emails about referrals that we have to follow up
on manually.
I don't love using the name "referral" in some places and "invite" in
others, but we already use the verb "invite" to mean something else
and "invite" is a canonical noun.
(imported from commit 0814c18395952fcdef234c1584984f71ca1b6f37)
We always intended to move the pointer up when you were at the
top of the viewport and scrolling up, and we always intended to
move the pointer down when you were at the bottom of the viewport
and scrolling down. We didn't intend to move the pointer up
when you were at the bottom, or vice versa. This commit fixes
that bug, simplifies the code, and inlines the code into ui.js.
(imported from commit 77e2ace9d2fc1025e1349e3be13c76c3a397fd38)
Moved 400+ lines out of search.js into search_suggestion.js. This
leaves search.js primarily responsible for lots of little DOM
interactions, whereas search_suggestion is more about data.
(imported from commit 53d08b29367c0172e483064f213538d45098279e)
In the future, this could come from the server to enable individual
experiments on a per-realm basis.
(imported from commit 8fd1ba1910b3cfd131f58bab8efbd11a42053bc3)
I haven't hooked this into test-all yet, but I did modify
message_tour.js to accomodate the test.
(imported from commit e58f595f4fe1160f539c18ec09dbe22eebf1f104)
When you return to Home, we normally restore your last
position when in Home, which might have been before the
first unread message. This is cumbersome for sidebar readers,
so now we keep track of messages that you visit while on a
tour away from Home, and when you return Home, we skip forward
any messages that were in the tour, landing on the last visited
message. This all happens before rendering.
(imported from commit 9124a231d94f153e283e5ea95e40c50a58406275)
Created up, down, page_up, page_down, to_home, and to_home pretty
mechanically from the old hotkey.code.
(imported from commit 5956b91c2e0122c6440f70db9b92f918c9b599aa)
Caveats:
- Since Chrome has trouble using W3C Notification when it's not
initiated by a user gesture, we try to use webkitNotification first.
- FF doesn't allow iconUrl to be of a different origin, so it won't display
our gravatars
(imported from commit c4f99ce6927a0d203d9f220d50b06737779bd7f8)
1) When you send a message, restore the focus to the composebox, targeted at the same recipient
2) If the composebox is completely empty and you press up or down, have that close the composebox and take the appropriate action
3) If you started the compose via a reply option (r, enter, click), don't refocus the composebox if the cursor has changed.
(imported from commit 84545e49d06959eb62e7fd2b22e1387383df6d1d)
Re-focuses on the compose box after a send, but only if
the compose-box was opened by responding to the message
at the cursor (by hitting "r", enter, or clicking on the message)
(imported from commit 8e7560c8ea31397b57b2bc3e2e7d9dd996226a6f)
Most of the model logic pertaining to unread counts had been in
zephyr.js, along with a couple global variables. Now the code
is encapsulated in unread.js. It was a pretty straightforward
extraction with some minor method name changes. Also, a small
bit of the logic had also been in stream_list.js.
Conflicts:
tools/jslint/check-all.js
(imported from commit f0abdd48f26ab20c5beaef203479eb5a70dacfff)
The only known outstanding bug with this is that it doesn't properly
handle the updating of a message's highlighting/presence in a narrowed
view (e.g. in theory, a message should disappear if it is edited such
that its subject doesn't match your narrow or it no longer matches
your search). I think I'll just open a trac ticket about that once
this is merged, since it's a little hairy to deal with and kinda a
marginal use case.
Also it's not pretty, but that should be easy to tweak once we get the
framework merged.
Conflicts:
tools/jslint/check-all.js
(imported from commit 2d0e3a440bcd885546bd8e28aff97bf379649950)
This is a prefactoring to eventually eliminate the home_unread_messages
global variable. More commits to follow.
In order to set up process_loaded_for_unread() not to modify
global variable to get its job done, we want to pull it out of
add_messages(), so that add_messages() doesn't have to pass back
state to the 9 different places in the codebase where it's called.
There are only 2 places where process_loaded_for_unread() get
called after this commit.
In order to facilitate pulling up process_loaded_for_unread(), I
made it so that the contract for add_messages() was to accept
already-hydrated messages. This way I could hydrate the messages
before calling process_loaded_for_unread() without have to
worry about double-caching them in add_messages. This will
slightly improve performance, but it was mostly done for code
clarity.
(imported from commit ad5aaad5b1f22c31647370f4c9dcb5f89d7d99a7)
The String.localeCompare function is really slow, at least partially
because it creates a locale-aware collator object each time. So now,
when we can, we create and cache a locale-aware collator object.
However, this is not supported on most browsers, so we fall back to a
non-locale-aware comparison. This is not ideal, but for now we are
mostly working with English-speaking customers.
(imported from commit 51aa02e3b9fe4a0ef0cb084874fe26e91c57f65e)